The spread spotlights 16 Jersey mayors -- 12 Democrats and four Republicans -- who over the past seven years, have been arrested by the feds for accepting bribes, burying dirty cash in their back yards, even forging dinner receipts.

No shrinking violet when it comes to matters of corruption, Hudson County figures prominently in the roundup with one current and three former mayors landing starring roles.

There's former Secaucus mayor Dennis Elwell, who was charged in 2009 sting with accepting $10,000 in cash from government mole Solomon Dwek as part of the Operation Bid Rig III.

Elwell was convicted of bribery and reported to the Federal Correctional Complex in Butner, N.C. on Monday to begin a 2 1/2-year sentence.

Jersey Journal file photoFormer Secaucus Mayor Dennis Elwell leaves the federal courthouse in Newark with his lawyer Jeffrey Garrigan, left, after his arraignment in December 2009.

Former Hoboken mayor Peter Cammarano III also has is own info bubble, with an arrow pointing to the Mile Square City on a map.

Cammarano was also pinched by Dwek and was arrested just 23 days after taking office in 2009. After serving two years in prison for accepting $25,000 in bribes from Dwek, Cammarano was released earlier this year. He famously boasted on tape he would ground his political opponents "into powder."

Former Guttenberg mayor David Delle Donna puts the tiny town on the map. He and his wife Anna used their political clout to extort money and gifts from a local bar owner. A fake set of boobs for Anna were part of the couple's bar tab. Both husband and wife are still sitting behind bars -- not the pub kind -- in Brooklyn.

Roque faces up to 11 years in prison and a $600,000 fine if convicted on all counts.
"I'm an honest man," he told The Post. "What happens going forward, we'll see. If I'm guilty, I'm guilty."

According to the criminal complaint, Roque told FBI agents he wouldn't have problem going to jail because he would read a lot and get buff.

The other "Real Mayors" include longtime Newark Mayor Sharpe James who in 2008 was convicted of five counts of fraud by a federal grand jury for selling nine city properties to his former mistress, Tamika Riley, of Jersey City, for the bargain basement price of $46,000. She resold the lots for $665,000. James served two years in a federal prison in Virginia.